Wednesday, December 03, 2008
Square Nested Accordion Book
These are great as photo albums and will be for sale at the Bobbe Gillis Gallery Holiday Open House next Friday and Saturday!
Tuesday, December 02, 2008
Hat Envy

I want this hat for christmas! Badly! The Bloom Beret from the Village hat Shop Dot Com. I Joy! Happiness! My head will be so warm and cozy and able to foster more warm and cozy thoughts! PS honey. I want it in Grey. XO
Monday, December 01, 2008
Sunday, November 30, 2008
The Perfect Crust

I've been baking pies for a few years now and have never found a recipe for crust that pleases me until now. While driving to work the day before Thanksgiving, I heard this fun story from Steve Inskeep's kitchen. The most worried-about part of the Thanksgiving meal, according to NPR listeners, is the pie crust. The secret ingredient turned out to be VODKA. Below is a snippet from the article, but click on the above link for the full story.
Thank you NPR!
Pie Crust
• 1 1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
• 1/2 teaspoon table salt
• 1 tablespoon sugar
• 6 tablespoons (3/4 stick) cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/4-inch slices
• 1/4 cup cold vegetable shortening, cut into 2 pieces
• 2 tablespoons cold vodka (see recipe)
• 2 tablespoons cold water
1. Process 3/4 cup flour, salt and sugar in food processor until combined, about two 1-second pulses. Add butter and shortening, and process until homogenous dough just starts to collect in uneven clumps, about 10 seconds; dough will resemble cottage cheese curds with some very small pieces of butter remaining, but there should be no uncoated flour. Scrape bowl with rubber spatula and redistribute dough evenly around processor blade. Add remaining 1/2 cup flour and pulse until mixture is evenly distributed around bowl and mass of dough has been broken up, 4 to 6 quick pulses. Empty mixture into medium bowl.
2. Sprinkle vodka and water over mixture. With rubber spatula, use folding motion to mix, pressing down on dough until dough is slightly tacky and sticks together. Flatten dough into 4-inch disk. Wrap in plastic and refrigerate at least 45 minutes or up to 2 days.
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Haute Chocolate Tea
If you're a chocoholic like I am, this tea, cleverly named Haute Chocolate by Teavana, is a low calorie yet tasty alternative to a milky hot chocolate. Been drinking this for the past few months and it's the heartiest tea I've had in a long time. Very heavy and sweet, I add just a touch of milk and it's perfect. Tastes like I'm drinking my dessert!
Friday, November 28, 2008
Beaver Coptic Book
Should I have put a rooster on the other side? Tee hee! This one will be for sale at the Bobbe Gillis Gallery Holiday Open House next Friday and Saturday!
Thursday, November 27, 2008
What Keeps Me Grateful
Is the career unfolding before me, the splashes of color I get to move around the page, wet ink on thirsty paper and a husband who supports everything I love to do, everything that makes me happy, who moves to the pace I set for myself, just to give me the space I need to see things finished. I married a person who wanted to solve problems with me right away. Someone who wanted to work. The person who had me tagged and classified as the middle child from day one. Who knows what makes me tick and knows just what kind of empathy I need to feel loved, listened to, energized and safe.I am making pies in the kitchen this morning while Doug plays trains and cars with Anton. It is a good life.
Happy Thanksgiving to all.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
New Coptic Book in Telescoping Box
Monday, November 24, 2008
Portfolio Center Fall 08 Production Students
Check out the latest bright creatives at Portfolio Center. We are having a blast blending art and technology, as seen in this poster. Just one of the fun assignments in this class. My second quarter teaching it and already I'm addicted to the assignments. Using this stellar Instructables lesson as a beginning point, everyone completed their conceptual self portrait within 2 weeks. You guys rock!
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Holiday Open House

Here's where I'm selling my next round of handmade books.
Friday, December 5th & Saturday, December 6th, 2008
10am - 7pm
Holiday refreshments, unique gift selections from visiting artisan, sale items and a raffle for free gifts. Forget the malls! Take a break in our inviting space! Ample, Free, Rooftop-parking!
This event will give you the opportunity to view all the new artwork at Bobbe Gillis Gallery. Plan on visiting the many other businesses within the new BrickWorks complex.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Coptic Cowboys
Friday, November 21, 2008
5-ply Cashmere Around My Neck
Cashmere 5 is made by Art Yarns out in White Plains New York. The 5 strands are usually seen twisted (called plys) but here they lay side by side and do a pretty good job of staying together because of cashmere's fuzzy factor. This color's got a number (#105), not a name and is a lovely mixture of rose, ochre and green and is lovingly dyed by hand. So every hank is unique. Also the more you wear something knitted in cashmere, the fuzzier it gets. Just like the Velveteen Rabbit. :) Cashmere 5 can be described in one word: orgasm.
More to come as I get closer to my happy ending. (tee hee!)
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Free Plants
I am not as innocent a person as you might think. I steal plants. Let me explain. When I'm shopping for plants, there are always leaves, stems and branches of plants that have been damaged by shopper traffic and have ended up on the floor, waiting for the night's cleaning crew to sweep it away for the trash. The NEXT time you see things like these on the ground, PICK THEM UP and bring them home, recut the stem so you see wet green instead of dried out brown at the tip and either stick it into water, or dip it into rooting hormone and into a pot of rooting soil. If you fail, well then at least you tried. But if you succeed, then you've got a new plant for free!
African violets can root very easily in water. Just make sure the cutting is of a healthy leaf so it can absorb as much light as possible. The above african violet you see here, I got from a discarded stem cutting last year at Lowes. Now it's a flowering healthy plant bursting with vigor and waiting to be propagated again. Yay me!
Today's moral: one mans trash is another man's treasure.
Any questions?
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
It's a Big Boy Chair
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Fall/Winter Window Boxes
Hallo Friends,
Today I am sick at home with another round of the family cold that's been traveling around our house. I had it 2 weeks ago and just got it again. This time it's worse and I now have a voice like a man's and enough mucus to build a small thatch hut for two.
So I am home sick today which means I'll be knitting, sleeping, drinking and beeeeeloging.
Today's topic will be all about my new window boxes, which I know you've all been anxiously awaiting news of this season's winter-hardy plantings. So here goes.
I went to Hastings Garden Center this year (don't bother going to Lowes or Home Depot as they have nothing new and interesting and no one knows anything about what they're selling, nor do they want any difficult questions from you or any other shopper) and bought the standard pansies (white and purple) to fill in gaps with cheery color. I needed something trailing, so chose English Ivy, which is very hardy and can get nice and full as long as you pinch it every so often. Just don't ever put this stuff in the ground! It spreads like fire and will choke anything it can find. English Ivy is evergreen (lasts the winter) and looks SOOOO pretty in pots and baskets. Nice on your front porch, too. That's what I love about plants. They say, "someone who is capable of love, lives here and takes care of me." Now that's a house I want to walk into. A house filled with love. (Go ahead, you can gag now if you want to. I'm sick, ok?)
So after choosing some standards, I found a variety of really interesting looking plants called Euphorbia. I got three varieties: Euphorbia Blackbird, Euphorbia Tasmanian Tiger and Euphorbia Glacier Blue. They are winter hardy and actually flower for a long time beginning in spring. They are supposed to get really tall, which probably isn't too good for the window boxes. So once spring gets here, I'm putting these babies into the ground where they will live and flourish.
So that's what I do with my window boxes. Every season, I put something evergreen in there, then something meant not to last and just for color, an annual like (pansies for winter or petunias for summer.) What survives at the end of that season, I put into the ground in my kidney shaped bed out front, or by the mailbox, or along my fence. So they cycle keeps going. Someday I'll be one of those crazy old ladies with no grass and all flowers and twenty cats in my yard. Closets bursting with a ten year supply of whatever hobby I'd put aside in favor of the next and no money in the bank. When I die, my estate sale will be a bonanza for the creative person. Just you wait.
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Little Bunny
This is the face Anton makes when I read him Runaway Bunny. The first page reads:
Once there was a little bunny who wanted to run away.
So he said to his mother, "I am running away."
"If you run away from me" said his mother, "I will run after you, for YOU (and this is where I begin to whisper in Anton's ear and he giggles and makes this face and melts my heart every time) are my little bunny."
Sorry folks. I've had a little wine and am feeling sentimental. Sigh.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Friday, November 14, 2008
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